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DEAR DOCTOR K: My teenage son likes to sleep in on weekends, often until noon. Is it OK to let him do this?

DEAR READER: I’ve been asked this question by nearly every parent of teenagers I know. I checked with my Harvard Medical School colleague, pediatrician Dennis Rosen, who confirmed what I’ve been saying: Letting your son sleep in on weekends isn’t doing him any favors.

Teenagers should get nine hours of sleep per night. Most teens don’t, especially during the school week. Instead, they stay up late to finish school work, take part in …

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S-R Media, The Spokesman-Review and Spokesman.com are happy to assist you. Contact Customer Service by email
or call 800-338-8801

DEAR DOCTOR K: My teenage son likes to sleep in on weekends, often until noon. Is it OK to let him do this?

DEAR READER: I’ve been asked this question by nearly every parent of teenagers I know. I checked with my Harvard Medical School colleague, pediatrician Dennis Rosen, who confirmed what I’ve been saying: Letting your son sleep in on weekends isn’t doing him any favors.

Teenagers should get nine hours of sleep per night. Most teens don’t, especially during the school week. Instead, they stay up late to finish school work, take part in extracurricular activities and spend time with friends. As a result, they struggle to wake up on time for school. A few days of this, and they’ve built up a significant sleep deficit.

Sleeping late on Saturday and Sunday may fill that deficit, but it creates a bigger problem: It shifts your teen’s inner clock further away from the external clock. That “inner clock” is kept in your brain. Your brain recognizes sunrise and sends signals throughout your body that prepares it to awaken and start functioning. Sunset does the opposite: A few hours after sunset, your body’s inner clock starts to power down.

In teenagers, the body clock is somewhat different from what it will be when they become adults. The clock starts to power down the body at a later hour, and it also starts to power up the body at a later hour. That’s why so many teens have trouble waking up in the morning.

So your son’s body clock naturally causes him to fall asleep later and to get up later. When your son stays up even later than his body clock wants, he is exaggerating the natural time shift of his body clock.

On top of that, by sleeping late on weekends, your son is exaggerating that time shift even further. The alarm clock may be saying 6 a.m., but his inner clock is reading 1 a.m.. This will make it much harder for your teen to wake up, and to concentrate during the first hours at school.

As far as possible on weekends, try not to let your son sleep in more than an hour beyond his usual wake-up time.